The book provides you with the most comprehensive and at the same time brief information of how the architectural styles were developed and flowed through the ages to our time. The author reviewed the most significant structures that represent different styles and cultures of the world from the late 4th millennium BC. Extensively illustrated the guidebook includes photos, plans, scales, etc...

Explore the city’s many Art Deco office buildings in a profusely illustrated ebook by Gregory Edwards. In between the two world wars London rebuilt itself and expanded with bright, new Art Deco styles. Part 2 continues the historical survey, then adds other buildings created in a Post-Modernist style that recapture the original Art Deco look. An 'Art Deco cemetery', and an index conclude it.

Explore the city’s many Art Deco office buildings in a profusely illustrated ebook by Gregory Edwards. In between the two world wars London rebuilt itself and expanded with bright, new Art Deco styles. Discover many buildings that survived the blitz and can still be seen. Part 1 moves from the riverside through Victoria, Mayfair, Soho, and Fitzrovia to the West End.

'London Deco: Introduction' is an essential introductory volume for the London Deco series of ebooks by Gregory Edwards. 'London Deco: Introduction' attempts to answer the questions: “Why is London not Regarded as an Art Deco City?” and, at least as far as London is concerned, “What Makes a Building Art Deco?”. It also has a directory of British Art Deco Artists and Designers.

A Source book for Photographers and Explorers.
Descriptions of Delaware's 3 Remaining Historic Covered Bridges, as well as multiple photographs of them. GPS Positions and written directions. Photo tips for each bridge.
A short history of Covered Bridges in North America and a review of the various Truss Types and information on the important bridge builders of Ohio.

Translated for the first time into English, Kirichenko’s absorbing account brings to life the history of Russia’s largest church--its origins, conception, the fits and starts of its planning and construction, the life that developed in and around the Cathedral, its demise in the Soviet period--and its recent reincarnation.

The prospect of building a house must have been daunting for early nineteenth century newcomers to the desert regions—no timber or stone, no iron hinges or window glass—a hundred things that seem necessities. It was here that residents already settled provided a model in the adobe house. Reeve-Kidney meticulously documents this fascinating chapter of of architectural history.